The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 18, 1932, Image 7

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    “AND ONLY MAN IS VILE. ”
Grain fields of gold and corn fields green,
While here and there, set in between,
Is one of earth Just plowed anew.
All black and stark; upon it grew
Rich clover hay; and over there
A pasture lies, now sere and bare
Except along the river brink,
Wherein some horses stand and drink.
And now a farmstead ecmes in view,
With big red barn and feed lot, too,
Enclosing cattle sheds and ricks:
And in the road, a hen and chicks
Half grown, and shoats with funny squeals,
All run before our spinning wheels;
Across a fence, a new born calf
Whose funny legs e’er make us laugh.
A corn crib, empty now, appears,
Which soon will groan with golden ears;
A granary wherein we know
The now shocked grain will shortly go;
A silo and a wind mill tall,
Some guinea hens that shriek their call;
Machinery beneath a shed.
And garden truck, full bed on bed.
Such were the sights in mid July,
In Iowa we passersby
Could not but note our route along—
Yet with the picture much was wrong;
For never could those scenes erase
The haunted look on every face
We saw along the well paved way,
Where aught should be serene and gay.
When poverty with plenty walks,
While in the cities famine stalks,
What are our bursting bins of grain,
Save only symbols of how vain
Is explanation or denial,
That on our earth but man is vile?
And he’ll continue vile, indeed,
i Until he overcomes his greed.
—Sam Page.
It "Seams” There Was a Wind
ma in •i-.Mfta-a■ ..^..........■■■..^
Despite the wreckage strewn all around her, Miss Linda Statt is deter
mined to go right ahead with her sewing. And what’s more she “seams” to
be enjoying it. A sudden tornado is responsible for the scene of chaos.
It struck the home of Miss Statt at Cold Water, N. Y., and you can see
what it did to her sewing room.
Sister Mary’s Kitchen
AND PROOF OF THE^ PUDDING—
If you are intereste'd in simple
puddings that are delicious, eco
nomical and nourishing, I am sure
the following recipes will appeal to
you.
Summer Rjce Pudding
One-third cup rice, 3 1-2 cups
milk, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-2 cup su
gar, 1-2 teaspoon vanilla, 1-4 cup
strawberries, 1 cup whiped cream.
Wash rice through many waters.
Det stand in cold water to more
than cover for 30 minutes. Drain
and add to milk. Pour into a baking
dish and bake in a slow oven—250
to 275 degrees F. Stir several times
during the first hour, then add su
Baked Peach Pudding
gar and salt and bake about one and
one-half hours longer without stir
ring. The mixture should be creamy
and slightly thickened when the
baking is finished. Chill thoroughly
and skim off the crust on tap. Add
vanilla end fold in preserves and
whipped cream. Turn into individual
serving dishes and chill until want
ed for serving. Any kind of preserves
can be used that are at hand.
This pudding is made nourishing
with eggs and milk.
Two cups milk, 11-2 tablespoons
cornstarch, 1-2 cup sugar, 3 eggs,
6 peaches, few grains salt.
Scald milk. Mix cornstarch to a
smooth paste with a little cold milk
and stir into milk. Cook and stir
until mixture thickens. Add sugar
and salt and cook over boiling water
for 10 minutes, stirring frequently.
Remove from heat and add the
yolks of eggs well beaten. Stir well
and fold in the whites of eggs beat
Small Cities to Hear
Symphonic Music
Chicago —(UP)— Many small
American cities never before priv
ileged to hear symphonic music
other than by reproductions will
have their first opportunity to
hear Mozart, Beethoven and
Strawinsky performed by the Na
tion Chamber Music orchestra of
Rudolph Ganz next season.
Sponsored by the National Civic
MUsic association, the symphonic
orchestra will play on most of the
ciylc music courses of the United
/
en until stiff. Peel and quarte;
peaches and arrange in a well but
tered baking dish. Pour the custard
over them and bake in a moderate
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦
♦ ♦
♦ TOMORROW’S MENU ♦
♦ Breakfast — Chilled melon, ♦
♦ cereal, cream, bacon and toma- ♦
♦ to sandwiches, milk, coffee. ♦
♦ Luncheon — Corn chowder, ♦
•f toasted crackers, apple, celery ♦
♦ and raisin salad, graham bread, ♦
♦ fruit blanc mange, milk, tea. ♦
♦ Dinner — Hamburg roast, ♦
♦ mashed potatoes, broccoli, salad ♦
♦ ot mixed greens, baked peach ♦
♦ pudding, milk, coffee. ♦
♦ ♦
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦■♦♦♦♦♦
oven until peaches r re tender. Chil/
and serve with plain cream.
Fruit Blanc Mange
Any kind of fruit juice, blackberry,
raspberry, grape or citrus fruit, can
be used.
Three cups fruit Juice, 1-3 cup
sugar, 4 tablespoons cornstarch, few
grains salt, 1 tablespoon lemon
juice.
Scald fruit juice with sugar. A
tart, unsweetened juice may need
more than one-4hird cup sugar, but
the pudding should not be very
sweet. Mix cornstarch to a smooth
paste with a little cold water and
stir into the hot juice. Cook 15 min
utes, stirring constantly, and add
salt. Remove fnom fire and add lem
on juice. Cool and pour into sher
Tliose Harried Words.
Prom The Humorist.
“Oh, look what I’ve done! What
do you think Charles will say?
“My dear, you know just as many
words as I do.”
States. Cities of 10,000 to 15,000
will thus get a chance to hear
actual chamber music. Dayton and
Toledo, among the larger cities,
will also hear the orchestra.
Banz was once conductor of the
St. Louis Symphony Orchestra,
later serving as guest conductor
in Europe and the United States.
He has made many tours as a
concert pianist.
Mrs. Mary J. Record and Mrs.
Nancy J. Taylor, 91-year-old twins
of Pittsburg, Kan., recently attend
ed their first motion picture show.
COWBOY ARTIST
WINNING FAME
El Paso. Tex. -CUP)— William
Riddle Warner, until 47 a cowboy,
soldier and forest ranger, is win
ning fame as an artist.
"I just began to pant.” cxplans
Warner.
"While I was riding or camping,
t used to find myself thinking. ‘I'd
like to paint that.’ when the sun
would be setting behind the moun
tains, or a bunch of cows would be
milling toward a water hole, with
a couple of hands lounging in the
saddle after ’em.
"I tried a few pictures in water
colors and then in oils, but I
couldn't get the colors to bland
right somehow. Once when I was
In El Peso I happened in on Lewis
Teel while lie was painting. I
watched, and asked him some
questions.”
Warner went home and painted
his first picture, using a chair as
an easel. That was two years ago,
when Warner was 47. With hard
work, the encouragement of a
sympathetic wife, who follows him
into the wild at a momoent’s no
tice. he began to produce paint
ings of marked individuality, and
recently exhibited them here.
Warner was born and spent his
boyhood on a ranch in Western
Canada. He began life in the
Southwest with a team at Hol
brook, Ariz., working first in the
Indian service, then as a forest
ranger, spicing those years with a
trip to the Orient "to see what it
was like,” and army service during
the World war.
He met Mrs. Warner in Tulsa.
Okla. They spent their honeymoon
on a 350-mile pack trip trough
New Mexico and Arizona.
A LONG TIME DEAD
From Indianapolis New3
It now turns out, if we may trust
the ekperts, that the famous Java
man perhaps better known as Pithe
canthropus Erectus, is, or was, a
woman. The bones of this supposed
ancestor of ours were not long ago
dug up ofter having been entombed
In the earth 500,000 years. Why it
should have been assumed that all
the numerous recovered fragments
—Pildown, Neanderthal, etc.—-be
longed to males, is not clear. There
must have been a good deal of jump
ing at conclusions. Sorely if there
were piltdown men, there must also
have ben Piltdown ladies. If our
amusing race has great great grand
fathers, or uncles, it also must have
had great great grandmothers or
aunts. That, we take it, is self-evi
dent.
Now that one hasty assumption has
been overthrown, it mayjje that a
study along seq lilies will reveal that
there are other long buried females,
whether apes, or ape-humans, and
thus once more the supposedly weak
er sex will come into its own, which
is greatly to be desired. It would be
a real pleasure to make the acquaint
ance of a Neatherthal woman, and
to remeber her on Mother’s day.
No woman, we feel, woul object to
being known as 500,000 years old—
as a skeleton, or a part thereof.
No such question could arise, and
for obvious reasons.
Rather we should look for a very
active and spirited competition in
ages between the two sexes. The
greater the age the gratr th dis
tinction and honor. Even among
people now alive there are men who
after they have attained a certain
number of years, and like to think
of themsilves, not as young, but
‘‘well preserved.” Bones that last
500,000 years are ‘‘some bones.” AH
hail to the Java woman!
Initial Cost.
From Schweizer Illustrlerte.
‘‘Fine teeth mine, eh? What
would you give for them?”
“I don’t know. What did you
give for them?”
Hagen’s Bacon
Walter Hagen, one of America’s
outstanding golfers, is shown with
the trophy symbolic of his victory
in the Western Open golf tourna
ment, held recently at the Canter
bury Golf Club course, Cleveland,
0. Hagen’s score was 287, while
bis nearest rival, Olin Dutra of Cali
fornia. carded 288.
Unwelcome Guest
Invades Party
Bakersfield, Cal., —(UP)— An
Uninvited guest attended Mrs. T
Maline’s party for her sewing circle,
Mrs. Maline entertained 12
guests. The uninvited one was
the 14th.
It was a truck which crashed
into the parlor of the Malina
home and came to a stop with its
nose among bits of needlework.
The truck had collided with an
automobile.
4
IwTbesi pncn do not includo any incrtaso brought about
by fht htdetal tax}
" ■" ... ■ r-.. i
Full Oversue — 440 11
PO.I *^49
Etch
In pairs
*159
mM Per tingle dre
Full Oversize — 4*50*10
•*79
Chevrolet ^^B Each
In pain
*1*9
^F Per single dre
Full Oversize —4*75*10
Chrysler 9
Plymouth •
Pontiac ■H^fe Each
^TB In pairs
4 Per single tire
Full Oversize —5*00*10
Essex ft A
Nash W
„ Each
In pain
Per single tire
“GOODYEAR
TUBES
are now so
low priced
it's thrifty to put a new
tube in every new tire
Full Oversize —4.50-11
•<*83
Ford ^
Chevrolet E»Ch
^ la pur*
'
Per tingle dre
Full Overtire— 4*75-14
Ford »JCA
Chevrolet V* W
Plymouth M^B Each
II la pair*
*>463
■B Per tingle tire
Full Oversize — 5.00*14
Chrysler *7 2
Dodge XM •
Nub SMI , E«h
la pairs
*485
■# Per single dre
Full Oversize — 5*05*01
Buick 0 ft 2
Dodge
N-h 9 A
^F Per single tire
Full Oversize— 50 ■ SVa
Reg. CL
s<230
Ford - M
Model T ^^P Each.
lo pairs
*138
X Per single tire
Why pay good money for
any second-choice tire when
first-choice costs no more?
You don’t have to take anybody’s word for
the fact that this tire’s low priced. Here’s
what it costs, in big, black type.
You don’t have to take anybody’s word for
the quality these prices buy. Look at the tire.
It’s a genuine Goodyear. Built in the world's
largest tire factories. Guaranteed for life. Full
oversize. Bodied with Goodyear Supertwist
Cord. Goodyear Speedway by name.
You bet this is a bargain. Goodyear never built
a better tire at such prices as these — and mil- *
lions of motorists know, Goodyear builds the
best tires on the road.
Why buy any second-choice tire when first
choice sells at the same low price?
SPEEDWAY
Tl'NE IN on the Goodyear Program every Wednesday night over N. B. C Red Network, WEAF and Associated Stations
SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR THESE VALUES!
LIFT RICHES FROM
GREEDY OCEAN BED
World Acclaims Bravery of
Italian Seamen.
A dream came true aboard a little
Italian salvage vessel anchored oil
the French coast a short time ago. It
was a fantastic, impossible dream,
lit for mythmnkers and saga-singers.
But a group of Genoese seamen made
it come true when they hoisted $1,
000,000 worth of gold from the
wreck of the liner Egypt, 400 feet be
low the surface, to the deck of their
ship, the Artiglio II.
For nearly four years those Gen
oese sailors and divers have been
working there. In 1922 the liner
rigypt, hound from England for In
Jia, was rammed and sunk. In. her
strong room she carried gold and
Bilver valued at $5,000,000, five tons
of gold in bars and coin and 45 tons
of silver. The disaster came in fog,
and not even the survivors could say
of a certainty where the ship went
flown.
In 1929 a group of Italian seamen
whose business was salvage began
searching for the wreck of the Egypt.
It was almost a year later before
they found and identified it, at a
depth hitherto considered far too
great for salvage operations. But
they were not awed by precedent.
They had special equipment for deep
gea work. And they had patience
and faith in their dream. Driven off
| oy bail weather, they returned again
| and again, slowly worming their way
into the Egypt’s hidden places.
During the winter of 1930-1931,
; when they could not work at the
Egypt, the salvagers turned to an
other task, and In trying to remove
a sunken munition boat from a traffic
lane their salvage ship was blown
up and 14 men were killed. But even
that omen did not discourage them.
I Last fall they blasted away the last
l barrier of the Egypt's strong room
and the treasure lay there, ready to
be taken out. Then came bad
weather and months of Idleness.
| Now they have dipped Into that
j strong room and brought up gold.
Their success Is the more notable
when It Is realized that these Italian
seamen attacked the Atlantic In one
of its strongest points. The currents
are powerful and almost constant
where the Egypt lies. Fogs are fre
quent. Favorable weather for such
work comes only a few months a
year. And the divers, at that depth,
can • see scarcely ten feet beyond
their heavy diving shells.
The search for burled or sunken
treasure lias thrilled mankind for
centuries. It is one of the high ad
ventures, and dreams of success have
ranked, in song and story, with
dreams of flying in the air, sailing
beneath the seas, finding the earth's
poles and girdling the globe by air.
The other dreams have come true.
And now, In an age singularly
changed in Its dreaming, comes suc
cess for this oldest and most de
ceptively alluring dream of all. Men
have gone down to sea and come to
I remjv
Gives a clean, coo! 6have making daily
taving a comfort. It i3 economical, a
^1 ^ E small amount making a good lather
^Z^ which soothes the skin, doing away
V^/^/CENTS with the necessity of using lotions.
paShifeiSEP_
crips witn tne great elemental forces.
And they are coming back with
treasure, gleaming bars of wealth
torn away from the greedy ocean
bed.
No Mystery There
Story Telleg—And while the little
boy was sitting In his chair all alone
he heard a horrible, horrible wail
right behind him. What do*you sup*
pose It was?
Modern Youngster—Static!
BRUCE BARTON
Recognized as one of the
g’eat advertising authorities !
of the nation said recently:
-
advertise today and quit
tomorrow. You are not
talking to a mass meet
ing, you are talking to
a parade."
®
You can talk to the never
ending parade in this ;
community through
these columns & &
l
Sioux City Ptg. Co., No. 34-1932.